How much do you know about heart attacks? Do men and women experience the same symptoms? Does a high total cholesterol really equate with a higher risk for heart attack? Are there always symptoms before a heart attack?
Cardiologist Dr. Dan Anderson of The Nebraska Medical Center answers these true/false questions that could save a life.
For more information about heart health, visit The Nebraska Medical Center online at http://www.nebraskamed.com. To make an appointment, call 1-800-922-0000.

BM bx report :
Hypercellular bone marrow biopsy.
There is focal and interstitial infiltration
by pleomorphic cells. They are of large and
intermediate size, hyperchromatic nuclei
with variable prominent nucleoli. They are
positive for CD45, CD4,
Ki67(proliferative activity) while show negative
reaction for myeloid antigens(MPO, CD34)
and B cell markers(CD19, CD20).
Reticulin fibers are increased in thickness
and density(+3)

Lupus Skin
If you have lupus, you’re likely to have skin issues at some point, but treatment can bring relief. Your doctor will likely prescribe a topical medication, such as a steroid cream or gel, to clear up the problems. Sometimes steroid shots are used. You can also help prevent skin reactions, too. The best way is to use sunscreen to protect yourself from the sun’s ultraviolet (UV) rays, and cover up!

You can have skin lupus with or without having full-blown systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE), the most common kind of lupus. Be on the lookout for some of these rashes that can be caused by skin lupus.

In some cases, your immune system may destroy hair follicles and make hair fall out for a time. New hair may sometimes grow in. A severe lupus flare can also make your hair fragile and brittle. This is most likely around the edge of your scalp.

These happen when the blood vessels in your skin become inflamed and damaged. They may show up as small spots or larger knots. They may also show up as lines or spots of red or purple bumps in the folds of your fingernails or on your fingertips.

Color Changes in Fingers and Toes
Blood vessels in your fingers and toes can tighten and slow the flow of blood there. The tips of your fingers or toes may turn red, white, or blue in cold weather or a cold room. They may also tingle, hurt, or go numb. This problem is known as Raynaud’s phenomenon. It helps to keep your toes and fingers warm by wearing mittens and thick socks.

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‘Really did wake up like this’: Topless Lena Dunham strategically covers up cleavage with hands in intimate Instagram photo.
She’s never shied away from baring all on her hit series Girls.

And Lena Dunham demonstrated once more on Tuesday that she really loves showing off her body.

The 31-year-old posted an Instagram snap of herself completely topless, using just her hands to cover up her cleavage.

‘really did wake up like this,’ she captioned the snap along with the hashtags ‘#sinead #cranberries #kathyacker #my6thgradehistoryteacherlaurie.’

The photo also showed off her tattoos, which were inked just below her cleavage.

It’s certainly not the first time in recent days Lena has flashed the flesh, as last week the star shared a photo of her naked body, with just pear and honey emojis to protect her modesty.

The actress also unveiled her dramatically shorter haircut on Instagram.

In recent times Lena has been recovering from surgery in her ongoing health battle with endometriosis- a disease in which tissue found inside the uterus grows outside the reproductive organ.

She was forced to cancel her Lenny IRL tour in May after suffering ‘the greatest amount of physical pain’ from complications with her disease, despite being told after surgery in April that she was free from the illness.

She wrote in her Lenny newsletter: ‘To be perfectly honest, I’m in the greatest amount of physical pain that I have ever experienced. After being told I was endometriosis-free after my last procedure, more disease was found in deeper spots that required immediate surgery and now physical therapy.

‘This disease is wily and unrelenting, and I’m really blessed to have a community, both online and IRL, who let me express how hard that is. Inspired by you, I’m gonna say ‘Eff you’ to embarrassment and walk the walk of a woman who really takes care of herself. My goals have to be simplified for this moment: to write and to heal.’

Lena underwent her fifth operation for the female reproductive disease in April but was admitted to hospital after the Met Gala earlier this month, after suffering more complications.

Lena added: ‘I’ve always been open with you all about the challenges I’ve been dealt with my health, even when it’s scary and embarrassing, even when it makes me feel weak or less than. So I’m not going to stop now, even though part of me really wants to, cuz enough is enough. My body, which I’ve worked through all kinds of pain for many years, just doesn’t have what it takes to do this tour. Lenny is about giving 100 percent of ourselves, 100 percent of the time, and I couldn’t bear to limp through this.

‘Obviously, your tickets will be refunded in full – we’re not monsters! – and we hope to be back when my uterus has taken a chill pill. (But not my spiritual uterus. She’ll never chill. She’s incapable of chill.)’

(10 Feb 2012) SHOTLIST
POOL
1. Various of Joe and Kelsey Alden relatives of victim Senior Airman Nicholas J. Alden, speaking to prosecution lawyers
2. Joe and Kelsey Alden sitting in court
3. Various of federal prosecutor Jochen Weingarten putting on robe
AP TELEVISION
4. Joe Alden, oldest brother of killed Senior Airman Nicholas J. Alden, 25, from South Carolina, and his sister Kelsey, being interviewed inside court room
5. SOUNDBITE (English) Joe Alden, oldest brother of killed Senior Airman Nicholas J. Alden, 25, from South Carolina:
“The verdict, I am happy with the verdict, justice was served. I think that the courts did a great job. We appreciate the apologies, sincere apologies. And I just want to let you know that we don’t have any ill will towards Germany whatsoever. Like I said, we love this country, I grew up here in Baden-Wuerttemberg, Stuttgart, she was born here, my brother was born here as well. And I plan on coming back in the future.”
Question: What are your feelings now?
Alden: “My feelings? I am satisfied, I am at peace, you know. I feel there is like there’s a lot, a huge weight off our shoulders – a huge weight off our shoulders now. So, it still hurts, it really does, but it is going to take a lot of time, but a little bit less.”
6. Various of journalists gathering around Aldens in court room
7. SOUNDBITE (English) Jens Joerg Hoffmann, defence lawyer:
“We have prepared him (refers to Uka) for that day since the deed. And we have told him that there will be the possibility, the only possibility, of a lifelong sentence. The thing will be the court didn’t follow us with this accumulated circumstances, and therefore we will have to wait for the written form. There might be some juridical discussion about that. We’ll have to see.”
8. Hoffmann giving interview
9. Mid of empty seats (of judges) inside court room
10. SOUNDBITE (German) Jochen Weingarten, State Prosecutor:
“The accused, who is in a sound state of mind, has committed this attack in deep, firm conviction of his faith, not just as a call but more of an obligation of duty. This is the result of islamic and jihadist propaganda which the accused watched increasingly on the internet with self conviction and belief.”
11. Joe Alden, his sister Kelsey and their lawyer outside court building
12. Mid of police
13. Mid of police cars
14. Various exteriors of court
STORYLINE
An Islamic extremist who killed two US airmen in an attack at Frankfurt airport last year was convicted of murder and sentenced to life in prison on Friday.
Arid Uka, 22, was also convicted of attempted murder and serious bodily harm for wounding two other servicemen and for taking aim at a third before his 9mm pistol jammed.
Uka killed Senior Airman Nicholas J. Alden, 25, from South Carolina, and Airman 1st Class Zachary R. Cuddeback, 21, from Virginia in the March 2 attack on an Air Force security team headed for Afghanistan as its members boarded a bus at the airport.
Staff Sgt. Kristoffer Schneider survived devastating injuries from a head wound. Another airman, Edgar Veguilla, was hit in the jaw and arm.
Judge Thomas Sagebiel ruled at the state court in Frankfurt that the circumstances of the killing mean Uka bears “particularly severe guilt.”
That means he won’t immediately be eligible for parole after 15 years as is usual in Germany, but must wait several more years for his behaviour and possibility for rehabilitation to be reviewed.
Life sentences without a chance for parole are not possible under German law.
In his ruling, Sagebiel cited the fact that Uka shot unarmed people – from behind in Alden’s case – and the severity of the injuries and disabilities suffered by Schneider and Veguilla.

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